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3 questions
6
votes
3
answers
872
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An element $g$ in a group such that neither $g=1$ nor $g\ne 1$ can be proved.
Edited (this question contains two versions of a similar question)
Is there some finitely presented group $G$ generated by $g_1,...,g_n$ such that
there is an element $g\in G$ expressed as a finite ...
4
votes
2
answers
544
views
Membership problem in monoids
What is the simplest example of a monoid with undecidable membership problem? In other words, I'm looking for a concrete monoid $S$ such that there is no algorithm which takes elements $s_1,...,s_n$ ...
8
votes
1
answer
338
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How bad can the recursive properties of finitely presented groups be?
Any finitely presented group naturally gives rise to an edge-labeled graph (the Cayley graph) and I am considering paths through this graph. Paths correspond to infinite sequences of generators, so ...